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Johnson graduated from the shorthand and typewriting department of Wood's Commercial College in 1895.[3] As salutatorian for her class, she "entertained the audience with a carefully prepared paper."[4] Historical records identify she married Victor Hugo Johnson on 20 December 1898 at the Sixth Presbyterian Church in Washington, DC.[5] At the time of their marriage, Victor Johnson (1873 – 1950) was the musical director at the Lafayette Square Opera House.[6] Prior to joining the Marines, Mrs. Johnson was in the Civil Service,[7][8] working for the Interstate Commerce Commission.[9]

According to 1918 newspaper articles, as well as the published history of Women Marines in World War I, Johnson's first duties were as a clerk at Marine Corps headquarters, managing the records of other female reservists who joined after she did.[2][7][8][9]

On 11 July 1919, the American Legion granted a charter to the first post of women's Marine Corps reservists. Known as Belleau Wood Post No. 1, its membership consisted of 90 women who had worked at Headquarters Marine Corps.[11] Opha May Johnson was a charter member of this post.[12]

At the end of World War I the Marine Corps, like all services, began the steady disenrollment of women, including Mrs. Johnson, from active service.[2] After her brief military career, she became a clerk in the War Department.[13]

Marine Corps historians have pointed out that errors concerning the first official female Marine have been circulated and published, the first of which concerns her middle name. Although many have identified the spelling of her middle name as Mae, her middle name is actually spelled May. That is the way she penned it in on the applicant line of a Marine Corps Reserve form. As an official document, her full middle name was required on the form, and thus documented for historical reference.[8]

The second fallacy typically published is her age when she enlisted. Although many report her birth year as 1900, placing her in her late teens at the time of her enlistment, historians cite her as being almost 40 when she enlisted. Various historical records and photographs verify that.[2][8]

A third, more recent error involves her official photograph. Another well known photograph of three female Marine PFCs (Mary Kelly, May O'Keefe, and Ruth Spike) in 1918, was cropped to show just the center figure and published correctly as being May O'Keefe. At a later date, that cropped picture was erroneously attributed as being Opha May Johnson and subsequently used by otherwise reliable sources.[10][14]

Opha May Johnson died on Thursday, 11 August 1955, at Mount Alto Veterans Hospital in Washington, D.C. Services were held at Warner E. Pumphrey Funeral Home on Saturday, 13 August 1955,[1] 37 years to the day from when she stood first in the line of women answering the call to become a U.S. Marine. Buried near her husband and parents in Rock Creek Cemetery, her grave is currently unmarked.[15] In late 2017 the Women Marines Association began raising funds to place a marker at her burial site.[16]